Why Specialisation is Essential for Business Growth

Strata management specialists earn more than generalists. Learn how to niche down and become a high-demand expert in your field. Explore 5 key specialization categories to supercharge your business.

By
Michael Teys
on
November 8, 2024
Category:
Maintenance

Narrowing your focus unexpectedly leads to an increase in income. The legal and medical professions have made an art form of this business strategy. A lawyer in general practice today charges $400 per hour. Specialists are charging $1000 per hour or more. The more they charge, the more demand there is for their services. 

Specialists know a lot about one thing and little about all else. They wear this as a badge of honour. There’s an inspiring arrogance about them. ‘I’m so good at what I do that I don’t have to bother with anything else.’ 

There is little overt specialisation in strata management. There aren’t too many firms advertising distinctive competencies in a particular area. Likewise, there aren’t too many individual specialists. Why? Because to achieve specialist status, you must say no to distractions. This takes courage, but fortune follows the brave. 

For those who want to stand out from competitors, consider these 5 strata specialisation categories: - 

  1. Type of subdivision – strata, community title (land), or mixed use.
  2. Size – small, big, medium, mega – pick a team! 
  3. Location – one suburb, one town, one state, one country (real estate agents do this well on a suburban basis).
  4. Use – residential, commercial, mixed, gated, tourism.
  5. Age – new developments, ageing buildings, dying buildings seeking reincarnation. 

Each of these specialities has their own attributes, and need discrete skills. Mastering these attributes is the beginning. Being able to articulate them is the secret to success. 

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Michael Teys

Michael Teys is the Founder and Chairman of The Strata Professionals Australia. He brings together more than 30 years of specialist strata law practice, a decade of strata business ownership, and an active programme of academic research into multi-owned property governance.